Posted by cccp1014 on 8/13/2018 11:19:00 AM (view original):
Posted by bad_luck on 8/13/2018 11:09:00 AM (view original):
Posted by cccp1014 on 8/13/2018 11:00:00 AM (view original):
Posted by bad_luck on 8/13/2018 10:52:00 AM (view original):
Posted by cccp1014 on 8/13/2018 10:51:00 AM (view original):
What I am proposing with Medicaire, Medicaid and SSI would not result in job loss. You argue just to argue.
What solutions do you have? Taxes at 99%? LOL.
You’re arguing for less spending. Regardless of whether or not your ideas are good, less spending will reduces jobs. It’s an economic fact.
If a clerk has to issue a reimbursement for $100 or $50 its the same job. I 100% disagree.
So there’s a medical office that was receiving $100 and it’s now getting $50. You don’t think that will impact jobs in that medical office?
No. The doctor has a finite amount of patients. If Medicaire is renegotiated to where it actually pays more up front then the doctor will see that patient. So when I call with an initial issue Medicaire agrees to cover more and will cover less if the patient procrastinates or if the doctor does not take them sooner. Right now doctors put off taking these patients because seeing me is more profitable for them. This results in patients going to the ER or having an ambulance come and get them and that results in higher costs.
So if I call and a medicaire patient calls and we both have a sprained ankle, medicaire should cover 90% of what say private insurance covers. That 10% would not be enough for the MD to make them wait and force them to go to the ER. On a follow up the doc will only get $50 vs. $100 but that doc already knows its just a checkup and will not take more than 5-10 min., as he already saw that patient. So that will not cost any jobs. So now the doctor has made more money and the patient has not gone to the ER so Medicaire saves too.
That makes zero sense. Anyone who read that is now dumber.
If we currently spend X and then we reduce that to .75X, the .25X that we’re no longner spending isn’t going somewhere that it currently is. That means that there are less jobs.
Maybe thats still ultimately a good move, but know what’s happening. In the same way that cuting defense spending costs jobs, cutting Medicare (or anything else) does too.